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Hatten Land files court application to be put under judicial management

Felicia Tan
Felicia Tan • 4 min read
Hatten Land files court application to be put under judicial management
Artist's impression of Satori. Photo: Hatten Land
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Hatten Land has filed an application in the General Division of the Singapore High Court to place the company under judicial management.

The company has also proposed for Deloitte & Touche’s Tan Wei Cheong and Lim Loo Khoon to become its joint judicial managers to manage its affairs, business and property.

Under section 95 of the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018, an automatic moratorium is placed on the company from the filing of the judicial management application.

During this moratorium, no order may be made and no resolution may be passed for the winding up of the company. The company’s property and its goods may not be taken except with the permission of the court. No other proceedings may be commenced or continued against the company and no enforcement order or other legal process may be issued.

In connection with the application, Hatten Land PH0

has applied to be placed under interim judicial management.

Trading in Hatten Land’s shares has been halted since Aug 2. The suspension of the trading of the company’s shares was requested on Aug 5.

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“The judicial management application and the interim judicial management application have been filed as a proactive measure to facilitate the ongoing restructuring efforts and to forestall any possible precipitate action by other creditors, in light of the latest developments of the group including the winding-up of an inactive subsidiary,” says Hatten Land in its Aug 5 statement.

The inactive subsidiary refers to Hatten Land’s indirect wholly-owned subsidiary, Prolific Properties Sdn. Bhd. Prolific Properties has been inactive since Covid-19 as the group prioritised the restructuring process and focused on its constrained resources on resuming construction at Harbour City. Prolific Properties was in a net liabilities position amounting to RM11.7 million ($3.5 million) as at March 31.

Prolific Properties’ main asset is a 2.05-acre parcel of land in Melaka, which is for the development of Satori. The parcel is subject to a security granted to a Malaysian bank to secure its loan. The loan’s outstanding balance is around RM2.2 million or $0.66 million.

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According to Hatten Land’s statement, Satori has not completed construction and work was halted during the pandemic. In a press release issued in July 2017, Satori is supposed to be the state’s first wellness-themed mixed development. The development was to have a gross floor area (GFA) of 570,400 sq ft comprising 192 serviced suites, an 85,250 sq ft retail mall with an adjoining car park, a 336-room hotel and over 50 facilities.

Hatten Land, in a statement issued on March 20, 2023, said that the delay in Satori’s construction at the time was due to Satori’s appointed contractor filing for bankruptcy. The said contractor eventually shut down. At the time, Hatten Land said that it was working on a tender to appoint a new contractor and expects construction to resume around six months after its other project, Harbour City, resumes construction.

In May this year, an independent professional valuer valued Prolific Properties’ equity value at zero as at March 31. The valuation stemmed as a result of its revalued net asset value being in a net liabilities position.

Prolific Properties, on Aug 1, informed Hatten Land that the Malaysian Court made a winding up order against the former effective on the same day.

Consequently, the Malaysian Court has appointed an official receiver from the Insolvency Department of Malaysia as the interim liquidator with immediate effect until Aug 29.

“As the judicial management application and the interim judicial management application relate only to the company, it is not expected to disrupt the operations of the company’s subsidiaries and business units as they continue to operate under their respective management teams,” Hatten Land says. “Given Prolific Properties’ net liabilities and zero equity value, the net impact of its winding-up on the group is considered insignificant.”

Shares in Hatten Land last traded at 1.1 cents.

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